This week’s AAII Weekly Digest highlights these “must-read” AAII articles:
Common Questions About Medicaid and Medicaid Planning
Medicaid is a needs-based medical assistance program administered by federal and state governments. However, state and federal...

We all want to achieve retirement security—and to maintain our sanity during volatile market periods. If we could only predict tomorrow’s markets, we would handily satisfy these needs—we would be able to sell before a market decline and buy at the bottom.
Truth be told,...

Each day, thousands of American are retiring. For many, finding sufficient income when in retirement will be a challenge. In fact, according to a brief from the Boston College Center for Retirement Research (CRR), middle-class Americans age 65 to 69 have more or equal wealth in...

Higher levels of confidence about one’s ability to invest lead to worse returns. I realize that this may seem counterintuitive to some of you, but this is the conclusion of a study accepted by the Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance (an earlier version of the study...

Here are the Top 10 articles from AAII.com for September 2016 (based on unique page views):
Why Buy Bonds If Interest Rates Will Rise?
Starting a bond ladder creates income now and produces cash flow that can be used to reinvest if and when interest rates do rise.
The...

A new stock screen I created omits one characteristic that may surprise some (or perhaps many) of you: growth. Nothing in the screen requires a passing company to be growing revenues or profits. It is an admitted deviation from how I’ve previously looked for stocks.
I’m not...

Look under the hood of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) incorporating a quality factor and you will often find accruals being used. An accrual is an accounting entry recorded at the time a transaction occurs, regardless of whether not payment has been made. Accrual accounting allows...

This week’s AAII Weekly Digest highlights these “must-read” AAII articles:
Investing to Avoid the Consequences of Being Wrong
Retirees should only risk the savings they don’t need; young investors should allocate as much to stocks as their risk tolerance allows....

One of the common behavioral biases is anchoring. Anchoring is basing expectations and viewpoints on previous, often recent, information. An example would be the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. The benchmark bond yielded 1.59% today. If it were to rise over the short term to,...

One of the fuzzier numbers in retirement planning is how much a person should save. Put another way, how much does an individual need to set aside each year to fund retirement expenses? It’s a function of projected expenditures, sources of other income (e.g., Social Security,...